The auditor's office also will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 5 for weekend voting, according to the auditor's office. Satellite voting locations will also be open leading up to election day.

Oct. 31, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, 200 Hawkins Drive

Nov. 2, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Iowa City Public Library, 123 S. Linn St.

Nov. 5, noon to 4 p.m. at Coralville Public Library, 1401 Fifth St.

What's on the ballots

Iowa City

Current City Council member Kingsley Botchway, Center for Worker Justice founding member Mazahir Salih, and the Downtown District's nighttime mayor Angela Winnike are candidates for two at-large council seats. In the race for the council's District B seat, University of Iowa student Ryan Hall will face council member Susan Mims.

Mayor Terry Donahue, who was elected to that role in an April special election, is seeking re-election to a full four-year term as mayor. In the race for two, four-year terms on the council, current council members Annie Pollock and Brian Wayson are seeking re-election and will face Jennifer Goings.

Mayor Louise From, who was appointed in February, will seek re-election to a two-year term in that role. In the race for five, two-year terms on the council, current council members Dotti Maher, Silvia Quezada and Jerry Zimmermann will face Nicholas Herbold, Noah Hughes, Jason Humphrey, Liesa Moore and Melissa Roberts.

Ballot measure on hotel/motel tax: Voters in University Heights also will vote on whether the city should impose a 7 percent hotel/motel tax that would take effect Jan. 1. The ballot issue requires 50 percent approval from voters in order to pass.

According to the ballot issue language, 90 percent of the revenue generated from that tax would support neighborhood housing and infrastructure revitalization like neighborhood stabilization, road repair, and parkland or green space acquisition, maintenance and operation. The remaining 10 percent would be used "for any lawful purpose." The ballot issue is related to a five-story hotel that developers have proposed to build east of Olive Court, north of Woodside Drive.

Solon

Three incumbents will seek re-election to four-year terms on the council: Steve Duncan, Lynn Morris and Lauren Whitehead.

Lone Tree

Sandra Flake is seeking re-election to a two-year term as mayor and faces Jonathan Green. Incumbents Kenneth Barton and Carl Brown will face Tyler Baird, Eric Morris and Ryan Ronan in the race for three four-year terms on the council.

Oxford

Tim Hennes is seeking election to a two-year term as mayor.

Brian Cooling is seeking re-election to the council, and Harry Dolder is seeking re-election to the council after he was appointed. The two will faceVicki Kasper and Margaret Reihman. Mary Sue Jiras has withdrawn her name from the election. The race includes two, four-year terms on the council.

Jason Struzynski and Bobby Wade are seeking election to a two-year term on the council to fill a vacancy.

Tiffin

Steve Berner is seeking re-election as mayor to a two-year term. In the race for three seats on the council, current council members James Bartels, Al Havens and Joan Kahler will face Royce Phillips and Eric Schnedler. Each of those terms is four years.

Ballot measure to fund public library: Tiffin voters also will see an item on their ballots asking if the city should increase the levy amount from 10 cents per $1,000 of assessed value to 27 cents per $1,000 of assessed value beginning July 1, 2018, to increase the annual operating budget of the Tiffin Public Library. The item requires 50 percent voter approval in order to pass.

Hills

Tim Kemp is seeking re-election to a two-year term as mayor. Nathan Coffelt, Michael Hughes, Christine Peters and Teresa Volk all are running for two, four-year terms on the City Council.

Swisher

In the race for two four-year City Council terms, incumbents Angie Hinrichs and Larry Svec will face Jerry Hightshoe and James Rowe.

Shueyville

Mickey Coonfare is seeking re-election to a four-year term as mayor. Brad Anderson and Becky Neuhaus are looking to fill the two, four-year terms on the council.